PITTSBURGH - Sienna Miller, who disparaged Pittsburgh in a magazine
interview, apologized on Friday, saying her remarks were taken out of context
and that she found the city and residents gracious.
The 24-year-old British actress, in town shooting the screen adaptation of
Michael Chabon's novel "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," called the city a name
that sounds like Pittsburgh, but contains an expletive. Her comments appear in
the latest edition of Rolling Stone, which hit newsstands Friday.
Miller, who starred in "Layer Cake," "Casanova" and the remake of "Alfie,"
told Rolling Stone, "Can you believe this is my life? Will you pity me when
you're back in your funky New York apartment and I'm still in Pittsburgh? I need
to get more glamorous films and stop with my indie year."
Her remarks touched a nerve here, where residents are fiercely loyal to their
hometown. Miller's comments appeared in the city's two major daily newspapers
and a television news anchor offered to take Miller around town to show her the
sights.
"I think obviously we have a great town, and I disagree with her comments,"
Mayor Luke Ravenstahl said, adding she should see the town.
"I'm sure in her short experience here she hasn't had the opportunity to do
that," he said. "If she would have, I think she would have found that Pittsburgh
is a great place to live."
On Friday, Miller apologized in a statement issued by her publicist, saying
she was referring to the fact that the production was shooting mostly at night
and she had not had a chance to fully explore the city.
"What I have seen of it is beautiful. I came once before to visit The Andy
Warhol Museum whilst researching a film and found both the city and its
inhabitants warm and gracious," she said.
She said her father, who is from Meadville, about 85 miles north of
Pittsburgh, planned to show her around the city this weekend.
Forbes magazine routinely lists Pittsburgh as one of the worst cities for
singles. But Pittsburgh's residents do not take kindly to disparaging remarks
about their town and often react angrily.
In 2003, the nationally syndicated cartoon "Get Fuzzy" lampooned Pittsburgh
as a tourist destination; Bucky Katt asks a travel agent if she has "any
packaged trips based primarily on smell" and she gives him information on
Pittsburgh. The strip's creator, Darby Conley, said he received 300 to 400
e-mails, including death threats and hate mail.
Earlier this year, Pittsburghers didn't take kindly when Rocky Mountain News
columnist Bill Johnson called the city "butt-ugly" in the run-up to the Super
Bowl, which the Steelers won.